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-   -   Alpha Gams "in the news" (http://www.greekchat.com/gcforums/showthread.php?t=34753)

Kristin AGD 06-05-2003 05:18 PM

Alpha Gams "in the news"
 
If this is a redundant thread please forgive me. But here is a place to post news articles about Alpha Gams. :)


University of Washington Alpha Gam crowned Miss Greek!

Click Here For News Story

greeklawgirl 06-05-2003 05:26 PM

WOW, that's wonderful! Red and buff roses to Jessica! :)

AGDLynn 06-05-2003 10:44 PM

Yea!!!
 
Congratulations to our sister!!:D

Kristin AGD 06-09-2003 03:35 PM

Positive article on greek life featuring an Alpha Gam!
 
An article from the Minnesota Daily

http://www.mndaily.com/articles/2003/06/09/6048

LeslieAGD 06-09-2003 03:50 PM

Congratulations to Annie and Jessica for portraying Alpha Gam, and Greeks, in a positive light!

DeltaBetaAGD 06-09-2003 11:29 PM

Great!
 
This is a fabulous thread! I hope The Quarterly has this info also. :D

greeklawgirl 06-13-2003 11:37 AM

Kristin posted this link in another forum and I stumbled onto it by chance. "Legally Blonde" is one of my favorite comedies...I had no idea an Alpha Gam was one of the screenwriters! :D

Blondes Do Have More Fun
Screenwriter Karen Lutz makes sure of it


IN LAST SUMMER'S HIT COMEDY LEGALLY BLONDE, THE JOKES ARE ON HARVARD, but the brains behind the wildly successful screenplay come straight from JMU.

Take, for instance, the movie scene in which sorority president Reese Witherspoon asks her sisters to vote on whether or not to accept a switch to generic toilet paper.

"That came from one time when ... we were denied our toilet paper [at JMU]. I offered my sorority sisters activity points for stealing replacement rolls from the administration building," laughs screenwriter Karen McCullah Lutz ('88).

In fact, moviegoers benefit a great deal from Lutz's JMU experiences. "People who read our scripts always say that [my partner and I] write good guy characters. I think that's because of my time as a little sister at AXP fraternity. It's easy to 'write' cool guys when you know a lot of cool guys."

Life has taken some dramatic turns for Lutz since her JMU days. She has moved from a 10-by-10-foot room in the Alpha Gamma Delta house (now the Alpha Phi house) to her 3,000-square-foot home in the Hollywood hills. She's traded studying and sunbathing on the "Hill" for writing screenplays while sunbathing by her pool. And the 1972 Plymouth Duster she used to drive up to Reddish Knob has been replaced by the black stretch limo that MGM Studios hired to escort her to the premiere of Legally Blonde.

But the road to screenwriting success was not a straight one. After she graduated from JMU with a marketing degree, Lutz bounced from job to job at various Washington, D.C., companies -- five in all the first year. "It was horrible," she remembers. "The only thing that would get me out of bed in the morning was thinking, 'I can quit this job, too!'"

When her husband, Walter Lutz ('86), was transferred to Albuquerque, N.M., with his job in 1992, Lutz tried a variety of jobs there until one day she picked up a book on screenwriting and something clicked. "I thought, 'Oh my God, this is totally what I'm supposed to do with the rest of my life. It sounds so fun.'"

The next day she saw a newspaper ad for a screenwriting workshop in Santa Fe, and she was on her way. Soon she joined the thousands of amateur writers sending scripts to Hollywood. And, like most of them, she got no bites, although she did occasionally receive an encouraging note in response. Two years later, when her husband was transferred to Denver, she continued to send out scripts.

Finally, someone took notice. Kirsten Smith, a reader at an independent film company in Los Angeles and an aspiring screenwriter, called after reading one of her scripts. "You're my new favorite writer," she told Lutz. After a meeting over margaritas, Lutz suggested they try writing something together. United in their mutual admiration of John Hughes, king of the teen genre in the '80s, they decided to try their hand at a teen movie.

Four months later when the partners finished their script -- a retelling of The Taming of the Shrew set in a modern day high school -- Lutz sent it to a successful manager she often read about in Daily Variety. It was a good move. He called back quickly and said, "I can sell this right away!"

Three weeks later, his prediction came true. Touchstone Pictures, owned by Disney, called with an offer. "All of a sudden everything changed," Lutz says. "Disney flew me first class to L.A. to meet with them, and we signed with William Morris, one of the Big Four agents."

Five and a half years after her first screenwriting class, 10 Things I Hate About You hit screens nationwide on March 31, 1999. "I just kept telling myself, 'It's gonna happen, it's gonna happen.' And my twisted imagination was finally validated." The movie stayed in the top 10 for five weeks.

With one success under her belt, Lutz quickly moved from being the pursuer to the pursued. Disney immediately signed the partners to a blind script deal, meaning they paid in advance for their next script, sight unseen. Lutz and Smith delivered Public Displays of Affection, a film about a dating school that has not yet begun production.

The next call came from 20th Century Fox, which hired the partners to develop sitcoms. "They called me on a Wednesday and wanted me to move to L.A. by Monday," Lutz recalls. She did.

Their first assignment was Getting Personal, which aired from February to October 1999. Lutz describes the 14- to 16-hour days on the set as "sit-com boot camp." "It becomes your whole life. You barely have time to take a shower, much less write an-other movie. When it was canceled, we did a dance of joy."

The partners were then free to take on other feature assignments. After writing scripts for Paramount and Columbia, they started on Legally Blonde, which MGM rushed into production. The movie placed No. 1 at the box office on opening weekend, making it the studio's highest-earning nonsequel opener ever.

Lutz's parents and sister flew in to join her as she walked down the pink carpet at the premiere, which included an after-party with an all-blonde wait staff and close to 3,000 guests. Two weeks later, the writing partners hosted their own party after taking 150 friends to see the movie on opening night.

"At about 11 p.m., the director got a call on his cell phone, letting us know we'd already sold enough tickets to be No. 1 for the weekend. Most of the cast was at our party, and we all just went crazy. Lots of screaming and hugging."

The next morning, the producer woke Lutz with a 7 a.m. phone call and even better news. "Everyone was shocked. The studio had expected us to open at maybe $12 million, but we opened at $20 million. It's [during] moments like that that I can't be-lieve this is my life."

These days, Lutz has the luxury of picking and choosing the projects she'll take on. Her dining room table is piled with scripts that studios have sent, hoping she'll apply her magic touch to make the characters and dialogue more "hip." Next to them is a stack of foreign videos, which the studios want the partners to rewrite into American hits.

They are currently working on a project for Miramax called Honey West, based on a series of 1950s books about a female private detective, which will reunite them with Blonde star Reese Witherspoon.

They are also writing The Miranda Obsession, a project Lutz was especially excited to land. As producer and director on the project, Robert DeNiro put out a call for "A-list" writers only to contact him with their pitch for the project, which is based on a Vanity Fair article. Still beaming over the partners' work on Legally Blonde, MGM agreed to set up a phone interview. Lutz recalls, "So I'm lying on my bed in my tie-dye pajamas at 8:30 in the morning, talking to Robert DeNiro." Her agent called back that afternoon. He said, "I don't know what the hell you said on the phone this morning, but you got the job."

Success on this scale has its rewards. The partners' scripts draw mid-six figures, and with the success of Blonde, their agent will now ask double that. Perhaps even more rewarding is the freedom it brings. "We don't take projects now unless we can really fall in love with them," says Lutz. And they will act as producers on future projects, including Honey West, which will give them more control over casting and other production decisions.

"I'm definitely living proof that you don't have to be connected in Hollywood to be a screenwriter. When I graduated from JMU, I didn't even know that you could be a screenwriter. It never occurred to me. It was the '80s, all business and corporate America. I just thought that's what you did. I wouldn't change a thing, though," Lutz says. "I had a great time at JMU. ... And my movies are getting made and they're doing well."

Just like her days at JMU, when she proudly bore the titles of AGD's "Most Laid-Back Sister" and "Biggest Partier" four years in a row, Lutz maintains her unique approach to life. "My basic mantra is that I've always, no matter what I've done, tried to make it fun. I remember my dad told me, 'Karen, the world does not owe you a good time.' And I was like, 'What? Yes, it does!' So, I've pretty much orchestrated my entire life so it's always a good time."

AGD4me 06-13-2003 02:40 PM

That is *so* cool! I sure hope the Quarterly has info on her!!! I can't wait for that movie to come out! :)

Hmm, and she's in LA... we need to invite her to alumnae events!!! :D

Kristin AGD 06-13-2003 03:03 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by AGD4me
That is *so* cool! I sure hope the Quarterly has info on her!!! I can't wait for that movie to come out! :)

Hmm, and she's in LA... we need to invite her to alumnae events!!! :D

When I first found this article I emailed IHQ with the link. They mentioned having to verify the information. Don't know what happened after that.

greeklawgirl 06-13-2003 03:10 PM

I was able to pull her up on Sister Search, although the records still have Karen under her maiden name. Her address is not current, either. I hope IHQ can track her down...I would love to have her come to an LA event! tee hee ;)

AGD4life01 06-14-2003 10:15 PM

Very cool! Hannah Thomas, a sister at our chapter here at Florida State was named Greek Goddess for the 2003-2004 school year. WOOHOO! Go Alpha Gam!

Kristin AGD 07-02-2003 10:57 AM

Congrats to KU Alpha Gams!
 
I have read about this for quite a while. Congratulations on finally getting approval for your new home!

Wednesday, July 2, 2003

City gives approval to sorority house plans

The Lawrence City Commission on Tuesday approved a site plan for a sorority house near Kansas University campus.

Alpha Gamma Delta Sorority received approval for its plan, which includes space for 88 residents, at 1030 Avalon Road.

Neighbors said they feared the sheer number of neighbors, as well as the proposed height of the building -- 47 feet.

Commissioner Sue Hack made the motion for approval, seconded by Mayor David Dunfield. They were joined by Commissioner Boog Highberger in approval; Commissioners Mike Rundle and David Schauner opposed the plan.


News Link

squirrely girl 07-02-2003 11:45 AM

wow - congrats to them!!! wish i knew what this house was going to look like!



marissa

Kristin AGD 07-02-2003 11:57 AM

Way to go Hannah!
 
Quote:

Originally posted by AGD4life01
Very cool! Hannah Thomas, a sister at our chapter here at Florida State was named Greek Goddess for the 2003-2004 school year. WOOHOO! Go Alpha Gam!
Somehow I missed this one! Congratulations Hannah!

AGDZO Susan 07-02-2003 11:58 AM

I have the Chapter Advisor's email address if anyone wants to send on congratulations - please PM me! I know they've been working on this for over a year!


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